Showing posts with label dubois. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dubois. Show all posts

Friday, April 12, 2013

1940s Seagram's V.O. Canadian Whiskey: Candid Camera Color

1940s Seagram's VO Canadian_Candid Camera Color


   
1940s Seagrams VO Candid Camera Color Men Photo Enlarger     Wally made this series of illustrations for the Seagram Distillers Corporation based out of New York during WWII.  The main dialog of the advertisement touts mankind's progress through the advent of color photography, or at least the ability for the average Joe to develop it in his own home.  For photography enthusiasts, this must have been tremendously exciting.  I remember Grandpa had several enlargers in his basement, where I watched him develop film, cut glass and build frames.  Those were the days.


1940s Seagrams VO Candid Camera Color
I wouldn't normally associate whiskey with photography.  But perhaps it isn't all that unusual.  I'd guess that 90% of all photography on Facebook has involved alcohol in one way or another.  Additionally, it isn't unusual to acknowledge mankind's ability to create fine photography and fine whiskey as "the result of the planning of many men over many years."  

1940s Seagrams VO Candid Camera Color_Group Of Men Drinking

     My modern sentiments would add, of course, that women probably played a larger role in the consumption as well as the developement of whiskey then this agency or era felt it appropriate to acknowledge :)

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

1944 Budweiser Advertisement: Ye Olde Melting Pot

     Grandpa made several illustrations for Anheuser Busch's classic in the 1940s and 50s.  In this illustration, "Help Your Community Drives ...and You Help America," the advertising company gives an interesting story about how communities during the colonial period (pre-1776) would contribute to a struggling family by setting up a 'melting pot before the door.'  I have no idea if there is truth to this, but it is an interesting concept.  As a father of two small children, this certainly doesn't sound like the safest of fundraisers a community could think of.

1944 Anheuser - Busch Budweiser Illustration

1944 Budweiser Illustration     According to the advertisement, during WWII, Anheuser - Busch which was based in St. Louis "supplied the armed forces with glider and bomber fuselage frames, wing parts, gun turret parts, foodstuffs, as well as ingredients for the manufacture of rubber, aluminum, munitions, medicines, B complex vitamins, hospital diets, baby foods, bread and other bakery products, vitamin-fortified cattle feeds, batteries, paper soap and textiles" and more.   

     A very impressive list of contributions.  Good thing we passed the 21st Amendment in 1933 :) 

budweiser 1944 bottle

Saturday, September 29, 2012

The Early Years In Black And White



New York City 1930s      My grandfather shot thousands upon thousands of rolls of film throughout his life.  My father and I both spent countless hours, days even, saving what film we could find when we were moving my grandmother from their home in New Canaan years ago.  Precious few roles from the 30s, 40s, 50s have survived the test of time.  They are tightly wound up in small metallic canisters with barely legible scribbling on them.  They have titles like "Chuck - folks at Woodstock, NYC BLDGs, East River, Geissman and family, etc."  
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They are dangerous and hard to handle so I've only looked at a handful of them.  They consist of mostly family scenes, but some are field research he conducted for his illustrations, and some may be of him and his fellow artist friends from inside his studio at home or the Charles E. Cooper Studio in New York.


New York City Harbor and Statue of Liberty 1950s

New York City 1930s

New York City 1930s

     While these rolls have been developed into negatives, scanning them is no easy task.  The older roles have a layer of nitrate embedded into the exposed side of the film stock, which is fascinating to look at but extremely volatile: if ignited it will literally continue to burn even under water.  I don't have the funds to send them off to some specialty store, nor do I feel comfortable mailing such rare and intrinsically valuable material.


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Normandie and NYC in 1936
 
 
     Enter Benjamin Lipiecki.  He's a friend and coworker, a recent graduate from Emerson College who has a degree in Digital post-production.  He has a love for old cameras and old film, with quite an impressive collection of his own, and approaches his material possessions and projects with a keen eye, thorough and scientific.  He's got a respect for old film like the rolls I have inherited.  It's because of my grandpa, my father and Ben that we are finally, after all these years, getting to see this film come to life in a photograph format: high resolution scans on a computer screen.

nitrate_032     In this blog I will post some of the photographs Wally, Glennie and their friends have taken through the years.  To preserve their originality I've decided not to touch them up, such as remove scratches, improve contrast and exposure (yet).  I hope you enjoy them, they have already brought thrills galore.  I will upload every single photo I scan to this blog's corresponding Flickr account, so look for more pictures there if you are interested.


Walter And Glenora 1930s

Thanks again to all who have read this blog! 2,600 views from around the world and counting!   

Friday, April 27, 2012

Daniel Boone Never Heard Of Logistics: the AAR in 1950

     Walter Richards made this illustration of Daniel Boone for the Association of American Railroads in 1950.

1950 Association of American Railroads

     The exact date for the publication is unknown.  On the following side of this illustration the date 1950 can be seen.

A depiction of Daniel Boone

     My father found two of these illustration magazine clippings that either Wally or his wife had set aside as an illustration Wally had done.

     
     

Thursday, March 8, 2012

A 1955 Sports Illustrated Illustration

     This Sports Illustrated ad drawn by Walter Richards was published in late April, 1955.   According to an article on the Dodgers found on the backside of this page (and at the bottom of this post), about one week earlier the Brooklyn team had broken Major League Baseball's record for most wins (10) to start a season.  Opening day for the Dodgers in 1955 was April 13.

1944 Sports Illustrated Illustration

     When he drew this lithograph, Wally was probably still working for the Steven Lions Studio in New York City.  

Boy In Sports Illustrated 1955


     Glenora always told me that one of Wally's strengths as an illustrator was his ability to show a variety of emotions in his subjects.  

Father in Sports Illustrated 1955

     I think this illustration is a good example of what she was talking about.   

1955 Sports Illustrated p.33 Dialoge


     The article below revealed several important clues narrowing the date of Wally's illustration to late April of 1955.   
Backside to 1955 Sports Illustrated Illustration